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Friday, March 13, 2026

Have Scientists Proven the Existence of Human Tissue in Many Eucharistic Miracles?

 

Scientists have proven the existence of human tissue in many Eucharistic miracles.

The Polish Embassy to the Holy See has examined one of the most inexplicable phenomena in history.

Do you know precisely what a Eucharistic miracle is? Do you know how many there have been in the history of the Church and what it means? These are the questions that the Polish Embassy to the Holy See in Rome sought to answer through an unprecedented exhibition.

At the Polish church of St. Stanislaus in Rome, the Polish Embassy inaugurated several years ago an exhibition dedicated to Eucharistic miracles around the world. It presented an overview of all the Eucharistic miracles recorded throughout the history of the Church. The display is complemented by scientific explanations.

According to scholars, the first Eucharistic miracle recognized by the Catholic Church occurred in Lanciano (Italy), in about the year 700. This miracle happened when a monk, who had doubts about the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, saw the wine in the chalice turn into blood and the bread turn into flesh. Recently, after examining the relics still in existence, researchers concluded that they were indeed made of human tissue. Since this first miracle, 134 others of the same type have been recognized by the Church.

Stolen, thrown, abandoned or forgotten

In his research, Dr. Pawel Skibinski, director of the John Paul II Museum in Warsaw, noted that in the majority of cases these miracles occur in a similar context: either the celebrant had doubts about the Real Presence (Bolsena, Italy), or the offerings were mistreated (stolen, thrown away, abandoned or forgotten). This was the case in Buenos Aires (Argentina) in 1996, when then-Bishop Jorge Bergoglio (now Pope Francis) was an auxiliary bishop there: a consecrated host was found on the ground. Days later, it had turned into bloody flesh.

More recently, in 2014, Father Andrzej Ziombra witnessed a Eucharistic miracle in his church in Legnica (Poland). On Christmas Day, the priest placed a host that had fallen on the ground into a glass of water. After some time, the host began turning red, as if it were bleeding.

He then warned the bishop, who asked for an analysis, primarily mycological. The results led the scientists to conclude that it was not mold but a piece of human flesh.

State of agony

As in most cases, explains the priest, the scientists succeeded in proving the existence of a sample of heart muscle. The investigation of the Eucharistic miracles also revealed the state of agony of the pieces of flesh: that is to say that the human tissue had not undergone necrosis but remained at an intermediate stage between life and decomposition.

Another phenomenon observed in all these cases: The appearance of bread and wine remains, even as the substance of flesh is scientifically identified. This is in keeping with our understanding of transubstantiation: that the consecrated elements become the Body and Blood of Christ without losing the appearance and other sensory qualities of bread and wine. Finally, the sample does not seem to decompose, even after centuries. Thus, in Bolsena for example, the blood stains on the marble are still visible, as if being impossible to clean off.

Although flesh and blood are not always visible in the Eucharist, concludes Father Ziombra, the presence of the Body of Christ is none the less certain in the eyes of faith. “This is what these miracles have reminded us of since 1300,” says the prelate: “The miracle continues every day on the altars of all the churches in the world.”

 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Westninster Confession of Faith (Chapter XXIX)

Pastorally framed 8-point summary of Chapter XXIX (Of the Lord’s Supper) from the Westminster Confession of Faith, addressing each section in turn:

  1. Christ’s Institution and Purpose
    The Lord’s Supper was instituted by Jesus on the night of His betrayal to be observed by the Church until the end of the age. Its purposes are remembrance of Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice, confirmation of its benefits to believers, spiritual nourishment and growth, renewed obedience, and the strengthening of communion with Christ and with one another.
  2. A Memorial, Not a Repeated Sacrifice
    In the Supper, Christ is not offered anew, nor is any sacrifice made for sin. Rather, it is a solemn remembrance of His single, sufficient offering on the cross, accompanied by thanksgiving and praise. Any teaching that treats the Supper as a propitiatory sacrifice is a denial of the finality and sufficiency of Christ’s death.
  3. The Proper Administration of the Ordinance
    Christ appointed ordained ministers to administer the Supper by proclaiming His words of institution, praying and blessing the elements, breaking the bread, and distributing both bread and cup to the gathered congregation—while also partaking themselves.
  4. Practices Contrary to Christ’s Institution Rejected
    Practices such as private masses, solitary reception, withholding the cup from the people, worshiping the elements, elevating them for adoration, or reserving them for religious use are all rejected as contrary to the nature of the sacrament and Christ’s command.
  5. Sacramental Language Without Change of Substance
    The bread and wine are sometimes called Christ’s body and blood because of their sacramental relationship to what they signify. Nevertheless, they remain in substance and nature true bread and true wine, unchanged from what they were before consecration.
  6. Transubstantiation Denied
    The doctrine that the substance of bread and wine is transformed into Christ’s physical body and blood is rejected as unbiblical, irrational, destructive to the sacrament’s nature, and a source of superstition and idolatry.
  7. True Spiritual Participation by Faith
    Worthy recipients, by faith, truly partake of Christ Himself and all the benefits of His death—not physically or corporealy, but spiritually. Christ is genuinely present to the faith of believers, though not present in, with, or under the elements.
  8. Warning Against Unworthy Participation
    Those who are ignorant or ungodly may receive the outward elements but do not receive Christ. Instead, they incur guilt and judgment by partaking unworthily. Therefore, such persons ought not to be admitted to the Lord’s Table while they remain unrepentant and unbelieving.

Pastoral Paraphrase of Chapter XXIX

(Of the Lord’s Supper — Westminster Confession of Faith)

The Lord’s Supper is a gracious gift from Christ to His Church. On the night He was betrayed, Jesus gave this meal so that His people might continually remember His saving death until He returns. In the Supper, believers are reminded that Christ’s sacrifice is complete, sufficient, and forever effective. As we partake in faith, God strengthens us spiritually, deepens our union with Christ, renews our commitment to obedience, and knits us together more closely as one body in Him.

This sacrament does not repeat Christ’s sacrifice, nor does it add anything to what He accomplished on the cross. Instead, it lovingly directs our hearts back to that once-for-all offering and invites us to respond with thanksgiving, praise, and renewed trust in God’s grace.

Christ has entrusted the administration of the Supper to His ministers, who serve the gathered congregation by proclaiming His Word, praying over the elements, and distributing both bread and cup to the people of God. The meal is meant to be shared—never isolated, hidden, or turned into an object of worship itself.

The bread and wine remain what they are, yet they are set apart for holy use. They point us to Christ crucified and, in a sacramental way, bear His name because of what they signify. Through faith, believers truly receive Christ—not physically, but spiritually—and are nourished by Him just as surely as the body is nourished by food.

At the same time, Scripture issues a sober warning. Those who come without faith or repentance do not receive Christ but instead bring judgment upon themselves. Out of love for Christ and care for souls, the Church must guard the Table and invite all who come to do so humbly, repentantly, and in faith.

Comparative Note: Reformed, Roman Catholic, and Lutheran Views of the Lord’s Supper

Reformed View (Westminster Confession)

The Reformed tradition teaches real spiritual presence. Christ is truly present in the Supper—not bodily, but by the Holy Spirit and received by faith alone. The Supper is a means of grace for believers, strengthening faith and communion with Christ, while firmly maintaining that Christ’s sacrifice was completed once for all on the cross.

Roman Catholic View

(As taught by the Roman Catholic Church)

Roman Catholic theology affirms transubstantiation, the belief that the substance of bread and wine is changed into the actual body and blood of Christ, while the appearances remain. The Mass is understood not merely as a remembrance, but as a true, though unbloody, sacrificial offering of Christ to the Father.

From the Reformed perspective, this view is problematic because it appears to compromise the finality of Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice and encourages devotion directed toward the elements themselves.

Lutheran View

(Flowing from the teaching of Martin Luther)

Lutherans reject transubstantiation but affirm real bodily presence. Christ’s body and blood are believed to be truly present in, with, and under the bread and wine (often called sacramental union). Both believers and unbelievers receive Christ’s body and blood, though only believers receive them unto blessing.

The Reformed tradition differs here by denying any bodily presence of Christ in the elements and by emphasizing that Christ is received only by faith, not merely by physical participation.

Summary Comparison

Tradition

Presence of Christ

Nature of the Elements

Sacrifice Repeated?

Reformed

Spiritually real, received by faith

Bread and wine remain unchanged

No

Roman Catholic

Bodily, by transubstantiation

Substance changed

Yes (unbloody)

Lutheran

Bodily, sacramentally united

Bread and wine remain

No

 


Saturday, March 7, 2026

Theological Perspectives on Infant Baptism

Below is a historical comparison of how several influential theologians interpreted the key passages often debated in the infant-baptism question. The figures represent different traditions and centuries, yet they repeatedly return to the same small group of biblical texts.


1. Augustine of Hippo (354–430)

Augustine’s views became enormously influential in the Western church.

Acts 2:38–39

  • Augustine emphasized the phrase “the promise is to you and to your children.”
  • He saw this as continuity of covenant inclusion, similar to how children were included under Abraham.

Interpretation

  • Children of believers belong within the covenant community.
  • Baptism rightly applies to them as the covenant sign.

Colossians 2:11–12

  • Augustine connected circumcision and baptism strongly.
  • Circumcision was the Old Covenant sign, baptism the New Covenant counterpart.

Conclusion

  • Since infants received circumcision, infants should receive baptism.

Household Baptisms (Acts 16)

  • Augustine believed households naturally included children.
  • He regarded this as supporting the long-standing church practice.

1 Corinthians 7:14

  • Augustine interpreted “holy” children as belonging to the Christian covenant community.

Overall emphasis

  • Baptism washes away original sin, making infant baptism especially important.

2. Martin Luther (1483–1546)

Luther retained infant baptism but grounded it differently than Augustine.

Acts 2:38–39

  • Luther emphasized that God’s promise extends to children.
  • He argued that faith itself is a gift God can create even in infants.

Colossians 2:11–12

  • Luther accepted the circumcision–baptism connection, though not as systematically as later Reformed theology.

Household Baptisms

  • Luther viewed them as evidence that the early church baptized families together.

1 Corinthians 7:14

  • He interpreted the verse as showing that children of believers belong to God’s people.

Distinctive Lutheran emphasis

  • Baptism is a means of grace through which God creates and strengthens faith.

3. John Calvin (1509–1564)

Calvin developed the most systematic covenantal argument for infant baptism.

Acts 2:38–39

  • Calvin strongly emphasized “for you and your children.”
  • He believed Peter was explicitly reaffirming covenant continuity with Abraham.

Colossians 2:11–12

  • Calvin argued that Paul intentionally parallels circumcision and baptism.

His conclusion:

  • Circumcision → covenant sign in Israel
  • Baptism → covenant sign in the church

Therefore:

  • Children should receive the covenant sign.

Household Baptisms

  • Calvin saw these as consistent with covenant family inclusion.

1 Corinthians 7:14

  • Calvin interpreted “holy” to mean set apart as members of the covenant community.

Calvin’s central argument

  • The children of believers remain members of God’s covenant people, just as in Israel.

4. Early Baptist Theologians (17th Century)

Early Baptists rejected infant baptism largely on New Covenant theology grounds.

Representative figures include:

  • John Smyth
  • Thomas Helwys
  • Benjamin Keach

These leaders helped shape early Baptist confessions such as the Second London Baptist Confession of Faith (1689).


Acts 2:38–39

Early Baptists emphasized the structure:

Repent → be baptized

They argued that the promise applies to:

  • those whom God calls
  • those who personally respond in faith

Therefore the verse does not mandate infant baptism.


Colossians 2:11–12

Early Baptists argued:

  • The passage speaks of spiritual circumcision, not physical circumcision.
  • Baptism occurs “through faith.”

Conclusion:

  • The sign should be applied only to believers.

Household Baptisms

Baptists highlighted verses that say households heard the gospel and believed.

Example:

  • Acts of the Apostles 16:34

Thus they concluded:

  • Household baptisms likely involved believing members, not infants.

1 Corinthians 7:14

Early Baptists argued that “holy” means:

  • legitimate or set apart relationally, not covenant membership.

Therefore:

  • The passage does not address baptism.

Historical Summary

Thinker

Infant Baptism?

Key Reason

Augustine of Hippo

Yes

Removal of original sin and church tradition

Martin Luther

Yes

Baptism as means of grace

John Calvin

Yes

Covenant continuity OT → NT

Early Baptists

No

New Covenant membership requires personal faith


A helpful observation:

The debate historically hinges less on the isolated verses themselves and more on two deeper theological frameworks:

  1. Covenant Continuity
    (Augustine → Calvin → many Reformed traditions)
  2. New Covenant Believer Membership
    (Anabaptists → Baptists → many evangelical traditions)

These frameworks shape how the same passages are read.

 

Four of the Most Commonly Cited “Battleground” Texts (Infant Baptism)

 

Below are four of the most commonly cited “battleground” texts, with the two interpretations placed side-by-side.


1. Covenant Promise and Children

Acts of the Apostles 2:38–39

Text (key portion)

“Repent and be baptized… For the promise is for you and for your children and for all who are far off…”

Paedobaptist Interpretation

  • The phrase “for you and your children” echoes covenant language from the Old Testament.
  • This wording resembles the covenant structure seen in passages like Book of Genesis 17, where the covenant promise explicitly includes believers’ offspring.
  • Therefore:
    • Children remain part of the covenant community.
    • Baptism is the covenant sign applied to them.

Credobaptist Interpretation

  • The command structure is repent → be baptized.
  • The promise applies to those whom the Lord calls (v.39).
  • Therefore:
    • The promise extends to future generations, but only those who personally respond in faith receive baptism.

2. Baptism and Circumcision Connection

Epistle to the Colossians 2:11–12

Text (key portion)

“In him you were also circumcised… having been buried with him in baptism…”

Paedobaptist Interpretation

  • Paul closely links circumcision and baptism.
  • Circumcision was the covenant sign given to infants in Israel.
  • Therefore:
    • Baptism replaces circumcision as the new covenant sign.
    • The recipients (believers and their children) remain the same.

Credobaptist Interpretation

  • The passage speaks of spiritual circumcision, not physical circumcision.
  • The burial and resurrection imagery of baptism is “through faith.”
  • Therefore:
    • Baptism is tied to personal faith, not hereditary covenant membership.

3. Household Baptisms

Acts of the Apostles 16:30–34

Text (summary)
The Philippian jailer believes, and he and his household are baptized.

Paedobaptist Interpretation

  • Household conversions in the ancient world usually included children and infants.
  • Scripture does not exclude them.
  • Therefore:
    • Baptism likely included the entire household.

Credobaptist Interpretation

  • The passage states that:
    • The gospel was spoken to all in the house.
    • The household rejoiced because they believed.
  • Therefore:
    • The household members were capable of hearing and believing, implying no infants.

4. Children of Believers Called “Holy”

First Epistle to the Corinthians 7:14

Text (key portion)

“Otherwise your children would be unclean, but as it is, they are holy.”

Paedobaptist Interpretation

  • Children of believers are set apart within the covenant community.
  • This parallels how children were included in the covenant under Israel.
  • Therefore:
    • Baptism recognizes this covenant status.

Credobaptist Interpretation

  • “Holy” here refers to relational or social sanctification, not covenant membership.
  • Paul’s concern is the legitimacy of the marriage and family structure.
  • Therefore:
    • The passage does not address baptism at all.

Why These Passages Matter

These texts sit at the center of the debate because they address the three fundamental questions underlying the issue:

  1. Who belongs to the covenant community?
  2. What does baptism signify?
  3. What is the relationship between the Old and New Covenants?

In simple terms:

  • Paedobaptist traditions see strong continuity between Old and New Covenant structures.
  • Credobaptist traditions see the New Covenant as fundamentally different, consisting only of those who personally believe.

 

Biblical Arguments Used by Traditions that Reject Infant Baptism


1. Foundational Principle: Baptism Follows Personal Faith

Core Claim

Baptism in the New Testament is consistently administered after an individual personally believes in Christ.

Key Biblical Passages

  • Acts of the Apostles 2:38
    • “Repent and be baptized…”
  • Acts of the Apostles 8:12
    • “When they believed Philip… they were baptized, both men and women.”
  • Acts of the Apostles 8:36–38
    • The Ethiopian eunuch is baptized after confessing faith.
  • Acts of the Apostles 10:47–48
    • Cornelius’ household receives baptism after receiving the Holy Spirit.

Conclusion

The consistent New Testament pattern is:

belief → baptism

not

birth → baptism


2. Baptism Symbolizes Personal Union with Christ

Core Claim

Baptism represents an individual’s conscious participation in Christ’s death and resurrection.

Key Biblical Passages

  • Epistle to the Romans 6:3–4
    • Baptism symbolizes being buried and raised with Christ.
  • Epistle to the Colossians 2:12
    • “Buried with him in baptism… through faith.”

Argument

Since the symbolism involves personal faith and identification with Christ, it presumes a believing participant.

Infants are seen as incapable of this faith expression.


3. The New Covenant Is Entered Through Faith, Not Birth

Core Claim

The New Covenant differs from the Old Covenant because membership is based on personal faith rather than physical descent.

Key Biblical Passage

  • Book of Jeremiah 31:31–34

Key line:

“They shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest.”

Interpretation

Under the New Covenant:

  • Every member personally knows God.
  • Therefore only believers should receive the covenant sign (baptism).

4. Circumcision and Baptism Are Not Identical Signs

Credobaptists challenge the claim that baptism simply replaces circumcision.

Argument

Circumcision marked:

  • ethnic Israel
  • male descendants of Abraham

Whereas baptism marks:

  • personal faith in Christ
  • spiritual membership in the church

Supporting Passages

  • Epistle to the Galatians 3:26–29
    • Membership in God’s people comes through faith.
  • Epistle to the Romans 9:6–8
    • Not all physical descendants belong to the true Israel.

Conclusion

Because covenant membership is faith-based rather than hereditary, baptism should be limited to believers.


5. Household Baptisms Do Not Prove Infant Baptism

Paedobaptist argument: households likely included infants.

Credobaptist response: the texts indicate belief within the household.

Key Passages

  • Acts of the Apostles 16:31–34
    • The Philippian jailer’s household rejoiced because they believed.
  • Acts of the Apostles 18:8
    • The household of Crispus believed.

Conclusion

Household baptisms appear to involve believing members, not infants.


6. Baptism Is Linked to Discipleship

Key Passage

  • Gospel of Matthew 28:19–20

Sequence in the Great Commission:

  1. Make disciples
  2. Baptize them
  3. Teach them

Argument

Baptism follows discipleship, which implies understanding and faith.


7. Early Church Practice

Credobaptist traditions often argue that early Christian baptism was primarily believer baptism.

Evidence Sometimes Cited

  • Delayed baptisms in early centuries.
  • Lack of explicit infant-baptism commands in the New Testament.

Figures Often Discussed

  • Tertullian (who discouraged infant baptism)

Interpretation

Some argue infant baptism became widespread later in church history, especially after sacramental theology developed.


8. Theological Concern: Avoiding Presumption of Salvation

Many traditions emphasize that church membership should reflect genuine faith.

Supporting Passages

  • Gospel of John 1:12–13
    • Children of God are those who believe.
  • Epistle to the Ephesians 2:8–9
    • Salvation comes through faith, not ritual.

Conclusion

Restricting baptism to believers guards against confusing church membership with saving faith.


Key Differences Between the Two Positions

Issue

Infant Baptism Traditions

Believer Baptism Traditions

Covenant continuity

Strong OT–NT continuity

New Covenant differs fundamentally

Covenant sign

Applied to children

Applied to believers only

Pattern of NT baptisms

Household inclusion assumed

Faith precedes baptism

Role of circumcision

Precursor to baptism

Separate covenant sign

Meaning of baptism

Covenant inclusion

Public profession of faith

 

Outline of Key Points on Infant Baptism

 

1. Foundational Reformed Framework

  • The discussion assumes classical Reformed theology based on confessions such as:
    • Westminster Confession of Faith
    • Three Forms of Unity
  • Worship is governed by the Regulative Principle of Worship.
    • Scripture must command practices explicitly or by “good and necessary consequence.”

Biblical/Theological Reference

  • WCF 1.6 (confessional principle, not Scripture)

2. Old Testament Covenant Sign as Precedent

Core Claim

The Old Testament covenant sign (circumcision) applied to infants, therefore the New Testament covenant sign (baptism) should also apply to children unless Scripture explicitly revokes it.

Biblical References Used

  1. Book of Genesis 17
    • God commands that male infants in Israel be circumcised.
    • Circumcision is the visible mark of the covenant applied to children.
  2. Epistle to the Romans 4:11
    • Circumcision described as a sign and seal of righteousness by faith.
    • Used to argue that the sign does not itself save, since figures like Ishmael and Esau received it.

Theological Conclusion

  • Baptism replaces circumcision as the covenant sign.
  • The sign is now extended to females as well as males.

Nature of Argument

  • Theological inference from Scripture
  • Relies heavily on covenant continuity between Old and New Testaments.

3. Continuity of Covenant Between Testaments

Core Claim

God’s covenantal structure remains continuous from Old Testament to New Testament unless Scripture explicitly changes it.

Reasoning

  • For 2000+ years Jewish believers placed the covenant sign on children.
  • The New Testament never explicitly revokes this practice.

Logical Question Presented

Instead of asking:

“Where does the NT say to baptize infants?”

The author argues the correct question is:

“Where does the NT say to stop including children in the covenant sign?”

Nature of Argument

  • Theological inference
  • Based on covenant theology and continuity

4. Household Baptisms in the New Testament

The text references but does not detail household baptisms.

Implied Biblical References

Common passages typically used for this argument include:

  • Acts of the Apostles (household baptisms such as Lydia and the jailer)
  • First Epistle to the Corinthians (household of Stephanas)

Argument

  • Scripture does not specify whether children were present, but:
    • If they were present, they would have been baptized according to existing covenantal practice.

Nature of Argument

  • Argument from silence
  • Covenantal inference

5. Pentecost Context Argument

Scenario Presented

If Peter had announced that children were no longer included in the covenant, Jewish listeners would have expected him to say so.

Biblical Setting

  • Acts of the Apostles 2 (Pentecost sermon)

Nature of Argument

  • Historical-cultural inference
  • Not a direct biblical command.

6. Explicit New Testament Text Used for Infant Inclusion

Key Passage

First Epistle to the Corinthians 7:14

  • States that children of believers are “holy.”

Interpretation in the Argument

  • Children of believers already belong to the covenant community.
  • Baptism recognizes this status, rather than creating it.

Nature of Argument

  • Biblical support for covenant status of children
  • Not an explicit baptism command.

7. Rejection of Baptismal Regeneration

Theological Claim

Baptism does not save and does not remove sin automatically.

Theological Context

  • Rejection of baptismal regeneration.
  • Affirmation of monergistic salvation.

Reformed Doctrinal Concepts Referenced

  • TULIP
  • Sola Fide
  • Monergism in salvation.

8. Early Church Fathers

Observations Presented

Lack of Early Discussion

  • Earliest church fathers do not mention infant baptism, interpreted as evidence that it was uncontroversial.

Fathers Who Objected (Example)

  • Tertullian

Nature of Their Objections

They argued preference for delay, not prohibition.

They did NOT claim

  • It was absent from Scripture.
  • It was absent from early church practice.

Reasons Some Opposed Early Baptism

  1. Concern about baptismal regeneration theology.
  2. Desire to delay forgiveness of sins until later life.
  3. Cultural influences and doctrinal misunderstandings.

Nature of Evidence

  • Historical and theological interpretation
  • Not direct biblical argument

9. Historical Universality of Infant Baptism

Claim

Infant baptism became nearly universal in the church for centuries.

Examples Cited

  • Mar Thoma Syrian Church in India
  • Church of the East

Historical Event Referenced

  • Council of Ephesus (431)

Argument

Even branches of Christianity that separated early retained infant baptism, suggesting it originated in early Christianity.

Nature of Evidence

  • Ecclesial tradition and historical continuity

10. Tradition as Supporting Evidence

Key Claim

For roughly 1100 years (400–1500):

  • Infant baptism was the nearly universal practice of the church.

Conclusion

Departing from this practice should only occur if clear Scripture demands it.

Nature of Argument

  • Appeal to historical church consensus

Summary of Types of Support

Explicit Biblical Passages Used

  • Book of Genesis 17 — infant circumcision covenant sign
  • Epistle to the Romans 4:11 — circumcision as covenant sign
  • First Epistle to the Corinthians 7:14 — children of believers called holy
  • Acts of the Apostles 2 — covenant context of Pentecost

Indirect Biblical Inferences

  • Covenant continuity OT → NT
  • Household baptisms
  • Absence of prohibition against baptizing children

Arguments Based Primarily on Tradition

  • Early church practice
  • Witness of church fathers
  • Long-standing universal church practice

 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Questions Regarding Paedobaptism and the Regulative Principle

 

John,

Thank you for your willingness to entertain questions by email. The practical necessity of concluding each WCF session within the allotted fifty minutes understandably limits the opportunity for extended discussion of questions that naturally arise during the presentations.

The matters I raise here are, to some extent, “cabbage we have chewed before,” having grown out of prior correspondence with John Homann on this topic. I fully appreciate your responsibility to articulate and defend Northside’s position with respect to paedobaptism. My hope, however, is that you might also engage forthrightly with some of the theological challenges that attend that position.

Chief among these is the Regulative Principle of Worship, long embraced within the Reformed tradition (i.e., What Scripture does not command is forbidden.) This principle raises an unavoidable question with respect to paedobaptism, namely, the absence of either an explicit biblical command or inarguable example.

Closely related is the candid acknowledgment by numerous theologians and pastors—nearly all of whom nonetheless practice paedobaptism—that the practice is not explicitly taught in Scripture. By way of illustration:

  • B. B. Warfield affirmed that infant baptism does not appear in Scripture.
  • Schleiermacher wrote, “All traces of infant baptism which have been asserted to be found in the New Testament must first be inserted there.”
  • Lutheran scholar Kurt Aland, following extensive study, concluded that there is no definite proof of infant baptism until after the third century, adding, “This cannot be contested.”
  • Catholic theologian Haggelbacher similarly wrote, “This controversy has shown that it is not possible to bring in absolute proof of infant baptism by basing one’s argument on the Bible.”
  • John MacArthur, though a Reformed credobaptist, articulates the issue starkly when he states that infant baptism is neither mentioned, commanded, nor exemplified anywhere in Scripture, rendering it impossible to prove biblically from either the New or Old Testament.

As you know, support for paedobaptism therefore rests not on direct biblical warrant, but on theological inference and ecclesial tradition.

Finally, the early witness of Tertullian is worth noting. While not rejecting infant baptism outright, he offered several cautions regarding the practice, including:

  1. That baptism should be delayed.
  2. That sponsors should not be placed in jeopardy if the child were to fail in fulfillment of their promises.
  3. That children should be permitted to come to Christ when they are able to know Him.
  4. That baptism should be reserved for those who know how to ask for salvation.

I offer these observations not polemically, but in the hope of thoughtful and faithful engagement regarding issues with which many in the Reformed community continue to wrestle. I appreciate your time and your willingness to consider these concerns.